Results 1 to 10 of 10

Thread: A song of beyond

  1. #1
    Registered User DieterM's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2010
    Location
    Paris
    Posts
    825

    Songs of beyond

    First song

    Let’s jump into the river Seine
    From the Pont des Arts,
    Float downstream to Le Havre
    And out into the sea

    Let’s swim northward then and listen
    To the bells of the Old High Church
    As the clouds open up
    Above St Michael’s Mount

    Let’s drift southward and be washed ashore
    Under the dunes of Agadir
    Where blasts of Chergui will dry
    Our salted skin

    Let’s switch off the cities,
    Let’s turn into dolphins,
    Let’s get lost at sea
    Like drunken boats
    Last edited by DieterM; 06-04-2013 at 04:43 AM. Reason: title change
    "Im Arm der Liebe schliefen wir selig ein…" ("Liebesode" - Otto Erich Hartleben)
    New poetry collection available (Kindle and paperback)

  2. #2
    Registered User DieterM's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2010
    Location
    Paris
    Posts
    825
    Second song

    15:58 and emptiness,
    when treacle Friday has a Monday feel
    and retirement is not
    just around the corner
    when 40 is the new 80
    and the minute hand
    goes up one, slowly
    ever so slowly
    to yawning 15:59
    Last edited by DieterM; 06-04-2013 at 04:43 AM.
    "Im Arm der Liebe schliefen wir selig ein…" ("Liebesode" - Otto Erich Hartleben)
    New poetry collection available (Kindle and paperback)

  3. #3
    Registered User
    Join Date
    Feb 2010
    Posts
    6,161
    Blog Entries
    8
    Hi Dieter. I'm afraid that gay dolphins just makes me want to laugh. The fact that the word is now so synonymous with the gay community just makes me think of alternative sexual orientation. Whilst I feel no inclination to criticize this per se and even though I acknowledge that homosexuality is not confined to our species - I have personally witnessed it in horses and even ferrets - for some reason the idea of a gay dolphin just tickles my funny bone. Not sure about the last line of that poem either. Daily vomit? sounds like a chronic illness, so it doesn't really work in context.

    As for the clock watching poem, I'd just call it 15:58 and start it at Line 4. The three lines before this aren't working because they don't really make sense.

    Apart from my observations, which, in the case of the first poem, I admit, are entirely subjective, you've given us something enjoyable to read.

    Live and be well - H

  4. #4
    Registered User DieterM's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2010
    Location
    Paris
    Posts
    825
    I hear you, Hawkman, I hear you! But if I made you chuckle, ain't that worth it? ;-) And in which book did I read the complaint that "gay was such a perfectly nice word before"? Can't remember it right now **chuckles, too**

    Of course you're right. Even if "gay" initially means something as straight (could there be a pun here?) as "joyous", it is nowadays linked to another meaning altogether (even in France and its natural horror for anglicisms, mayors don't marry homos but gays since Wednesday). Don't ask me why I was thinking of "gay dolphins" anyway… I'll have to find a better word.

    As for the second poem, I see what you mean, too. Wasn't so sure whether I should sprout 'em places and gazes anyway. And seems I shouldn't :-)

    As for the title, I'm sure I will come up with more songs of beyond until next Thursday when the weather forecasters finally promise us a bit of sun (been out a bit this morning, with a tendency to hide ever since—at least, it's dry outside, which will change on Monday, or so they say…)
    "Im Arm der Liebe schliefen wir selig ein…" ("Liebesode" - Otto Erich Hartleben)
    New poetry collection available (Kindle and paperback)

  5. #5
    a dark soul Haunted's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2009
    Location
    NY
    Posts
    10,145
    Blog Entries
    4
    I adore the first song, although I have the same reaction as Hawk. Best to avoid ambiguous words if it's not your intended meaning. You had me thinking of a joyful riverboat ride which is just lovely until the last stanza. "human condition" is too heavy and weakens what came before. Unless you really want to inject the gross factor, you would not even need the last stanza.... Just a thought.

    The second song is also very well done. The idea of "40 is the new 80" is frightening. Say it isn't so!

    "But do you really, seriously, Major Scobie," Dr. Sykes asked, "believe in hell?"
    "Oh, yes, I do."
    "In flames and torment?"
    "Perhaps not quite that. They tell us it may be a permanent sense of loss."
    "That sort of hell wouldn't worry me," Fellowes said.
    "Perhaps you've never lost anything of importance," Scobie said.

  6. #6
    Registered User DieterM's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2010
    Location
    Paris
    Posts
    825
    thanks h., and you're absolutely right. Took out the parts in both songs that you and Hawkman found feeble or nonsensical, and rather like the result!
    Oh, and as for the 40—just you wait to get there! ;-) But I'd like to reassure you that sometimes, my 40 feel the new 20, too, so I guess it's a rather balanced experience.
    "Im Arm der Liebe schliefen wir selig ein…" ("Liebesode" - Otto Erich Hartleben)
    New poetry collection available (Kindle and paperback)

  7. #7
    Registered User DieterM's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2010
    Location
    Paris
    Posts
    825
    Third song

    Our Father (Mother? Anything? Nothing?)
    In… Gee, wherever. Some place
    Without rain on Monday mornings,
    That cloud no. 7 that I doubt is yours.
    Hallowed be your name, they say,
    The same who shallow it and hollow it.
    Your kingdom come? No thank you,
    I’d rather you were president,
    If you don’t mind,
    For I could vote you out eventually.
    Your will be done. Or mine.
    Your choice but don’t expect me to obey.
    On earth as in—again?
    Why heaven when
    You can have Paris, or Zanzibar,
    Or the isle of Crete?
    Take away my daily hunger,
    My hope to win the lottery,
    My senseless delusion that one day,
    I’ll cash in the Nobel Prize.
    Forgive me my weakness—
    Sorry, I don’t do sins—,
    But forgive me anyway,
    And I might love you back one day.
    I might even start to believe
    In you, whoever, wherever.
    Save me from the time of vain craving
    And deliver me from bookkeeping
    and tedious office meetings
    and trademarked US-coffee® that tastes like pee.
    For me, my power, and my glory, and—
    Oh what the f uck…
    I can’t even believe that little…
    "Im Arm der Liebe schliefen wir selig ein…" ("Liebesode" - Otto Erich Hartleben)
    New poetry collection available (Kindle and paperback)

  8. #8
    Registered User
    Join Date
    Feb 2010
    Posts
    6,161
    Blog Entries
    8
    I like the idea behind this Dieter, but it's far too busy at the start. The excessive digressions spoil the flow. There are too many ings in the first line, and the full stop after wherever in L2 would be better as a comma. I'd cut the line about the cloud, it sounds like a line of cosmetics. L6 "the same" doesn't work for me, "those who" would. Cut "again" in L13, leave the emdash in though, it forms a Bridge to the next line. L26 I'd cut "whoever, wherever," it's repetition and you've already made the point. Lastly, cut the last line.

    The rest of it is rather fun!

    Live and be well - H

  9. #9
    Inexplicably Undiscovered
    Join Date
    Jun 2007
    Location
    next door to the lady in the vinegar bottle
    Posts
    5,089
    Blog Entries
    72
    Methinks the entire trio of these splendid, Dieter.

    I read the line about the dolphins, but didn't catch in the lines that they were gay. (By the bye, the adjective is still valid for both meanings, because you can usually tell which one through the context. Although sometimes there's ambiguity, as in the song lyric: "Broadway!Broadway!/Everybody's happy/ and gay." Oh, I kid! I kid! Only recently has the new meaning of the way been a noun. There was a joke to that effect at least a decade ago on a wonderful American sit-com, The Larry Sanders Show.) Even so, I'd buy the concept of "gay dolphins" before buying "drunken boats."

    Loved the line: "40 is the new 80." And the post-mod parody of The Lord's Prayer is irreverent but funny as. . .heck.
    Last edited by AuntShecky; 06-05-2013 at 05:07 PM.

  10. #10
    Registered User DieterM's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2010
    Location
    Paris
    Posts
    825
    @Hawkman, glad you had fun with that latest offering. I did get carried away a bit, I guess; I'll certainly edit them sometime later.

    @Auntie, thanks for your praise, it means a lot to me! Well, for the gay dolphins, you came too late as I've deprived them of gayness now (wehre it's plain "doplhins", it was just "gay dlphins" before so you don't miss much of the fun). On second reading, it did sound a bit like dolphins *****ing about who of Barbra Strei-Hering or Judy Gar-Swordfish was better and if George Clownfish'll get out of the corals one day, so I took it out ;-) As for the "drunken boats", I was hinting at one famous drunken boat (the one in Rimbaud's famous poem "Le Bateau Ivre").
    "Im Arm der Liebe schliefen wir selig ein…" ("Liebesode" - Otto Erich Hartleben)
    New poetry collection available (Kindle and paperback)

Similar Threads

  1. Song
    By David Strugnell in forum Poems, Poets, and Poetry
    Replies: 1
    Last Post: 07-23-2011, 09:30 AM
  2. song III
    By rimbaud in forum Personal Poetry
    Replies: 2
    Last Post: 10-22-2009, 10:32 PM
  3. song?
    By ClassicRockKid in forum 1984
    Replies: 3
    Last Post: 11-14-2008, 02:18 PM
  4. Song of Cyberlove/in Song of Solomon Tradition
    By Countess in forum Personal Poetry
    Replies: 2
    Last Post: 11-02-2008, 11:03 PM
  5. The Sea's Song
    By thevintagepiper in forum Personal Poetry
    Replies: 5
    Last Post: 07-10-2006, 01:37 PM

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •